Monthly Archives: May 2015

So therapies are therapeutically effective; this result of the studies spurs us on to integrate their therapeutic power into the work of Christian ministry. But two other cumulative results of the scientific literature on psychotherapy outcomes raise serious questions about … Continue reading →

Speaking to the students of the pastor’s college of which he was president, Spurgeon remarked: We ought not to put it on this foot,–not, “Can I prove that I ought to go?” but, “Can I prove that I ought not to go?” … Continue reading →

Frame outlines the scientific method as such: “Experiment. Observe. Measure. Gradually, observed facts will accumulate into a dependable body of knowledge.” However, a page or so later he states. The “popular understanding of the scientific method” that we mentioned earlier is … Continue reading →